Don Lemon’s Arrest Is a Five-Alarm Fire Moment
Posted on r/politics |
Score: 21048 |
Comments: 1047
The article details the arrest of journalist Don Lemon and others for documenting a protest at a church, framing it as a severe escalation of the Trump administration's attacks on First Amendment rights. It argues this event signals a dangerous willingness among the administration's supporters to abandon constitutional principles like free speech and assembly in favor of loyalty to the president.
Key Points:
- Don Lemon and others were arrested for documenting a protest, not participating in it, marking a direct attack on journalism.
- The arrest occurred despite a federal judge previously finding no probable cause to arrest Lemon.
- The author characterizes this as a 'five-alarm fire moment' showing the administration's willingness to solidify control by violating the First Amendment.
- The article connects this to a broader pattern of the administration and its supporters eroding rights to speak and protest.
- It raises concerns about how far Trump's followers will go in abandoning once-sacrosanct constitutional principles.
"Even for an administration that has spent a year violating the First Amendment in all kinds of novel ways, the arrest of a prominent journalist is a shock—a five-alarm fire moment."
— From the article
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Final Jeffrey Epstein Files cache released by DOJ: read in full
Posted on r/politics |
Score: 18183 |
Comments: 1748
The U.S. Department of Justice released its final cache of documents related to Jeffrey Epstein, comprising over 3 million pages, as mandated by the Epstein Files Transparency Act. The release includes numerous unverified tips about prominent figures, with the DOJ explicitly stating many allegations against former President Donald Trump are unfounded and false.
Key Points:
- The DOJ released over 3 million pages of documents, plus videos and images, as the final disclosure under the Epstein Files Transparency Act.
- The documents include many public tips and allegations about prominent figures, including Donald Trump, which investigators largely deemed not credible.
- The DOJ and White House emphasized that claims against Trump in the files are 'unfounded and false' and were included because the act required releasing all material submitted to the FBI.
- One specific record reveals Epstein privately supported Trump's efforts to remove Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell, as shown in a 2018 email exchange with Steve Bannon.
- The release concludes the DOJ's legal obligation to provide transparency about the Epstein investigation and what the government knew about his abuse network.
"This production may include fake or falsely submitted images, documents or videos, as everything that was sent to the FBI by the public was included in the production that is responsive to the Act. Some of the documents contain untrue and sensationalist claims against President Trump that were submitted to the FBI right before the 2020 election. To be clear, the claims are unfounded and false..."
— From the article
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Trump’s DOJ Announces Brazen New Epstein Files Cover-Up
Posted on r/politics |
Score: 7650 |
Comments: 462
The Trump administration's Department of Justice announced it would release only about half of the 6 million pages of documents related to Jeffrey Epstein, citing legal privileges and victim protection. Critics, including survivors and lawmakers, view the move as a cover-up to protect individuals in Epstein's network from accountability. The announcement came after a legal deadline and follows a private meeting between the Deputy Attorney General and Epstein accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell.
Key Points:
- The DOJ, under Trump, released only 3 million of 6 million collected Epstein documents, withholding half.
- Deputy AG Todd Blanche, Trump's former personal attorney, stated the review was complete, fulfilling legal obligations under the Transparency Act.
- Critics, including a survivor and a Democratic congressman, accuse the administration of a cover-up to avoid exposing potential co-conspirators.
- The announcement followed a private meeting between Blanche and Ghislaine Maxwell, who later praised Trump and was transferred to a lower-security prison.
- Withheld documents include those for ongoing investigations, attorney-client privilege, victim identities, and explicit criminal material.
"The fact that the department has chosen to hold back so many files has renewed concerns that some people involved in Epstein’s heinous operation may not end up being held to account."
— From the article
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Anthropic: AI assisted coding doesn't show efficiency gains and impairs developers abilities.
Posted on r/programming |
Score: 2889 |
Comments: 550
The article examines how AI assistance affects skill acquisition, finding that while it boosts productivity for novices, it can impair the development of foundational skills like conceptual understanding and debugging. The research identifies that only certain interaction patterns involving cognitive engagement preserve learning outcomes. The authors conclude that AI-enhanced productivity is not a shortcut to competence and must be carefully integrated to protect skill formation, especially in safety-critical fields.
Key Points:
- AI assistance provides significant productivity gains, particularly for novice workers.
- Heavy reliance on AI for unfamiliar tasks can impair skill acquisition, including conceptual understanding and debugging abilities.
- The study found AI use did not deliver significant average efficiency gains in the context of learning a new programming library.
- Researchers identified six distinct AI interaction patterns, with three cognitive engagement patterns preserving learning outcomes.
- The findings suggest AI assistance should be carefully adopted into workflows to preserve skill formation, especially in safety-critical domains.
"Our findings suggest that AI-enhanced productivity is not a shortcut to competence and AI assistance should be carefully adopted into workflows to preserve skill formation -- particularly in safety-critical domains."
— From the article
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The Complete Guide to Claude Code V4 — The Community Asked, We Delivered: 85% Context Reduction, Custom Agents & Session Teleportation
Posted on r/ClaudeAI |
Score: 440 |
Comments: 44
This article presents Claude Code V4, a major update introducing significant efficiency and workflow improvements. Key innovations include an 85% reduction in context usage through lazy-loading tools, automatic delegation to specialized custom agents, and the ability to move sessions between devices.
Key Points:
- MCP Tool Search reduces context overhead by 85% (from 77K to 8.7K tokens) via lazy-loading tools on-demand.
- Custom Agents enable automatic delegation to specialists, each with isolated context windows.
- Session Teleportation allows moving work sessions between terminal and web interfaces seamlessly.
- Background Tasks enable parallel agent execution.
- The guide emphasizes security, noting Claude Code automatically reads .env files without explicit permission.
"Security researchers discovered that Claude Code automatically reads .env files without explicit permission."
— From the article
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Question: Why OPNsense over pfSense?
Posted on r/selfhosted |
Score: 63 |
Comments: 54
The author is seeking a technical, non-contentious comparison between OPNsense and pfSense, specifically asking for must-have packages, security differences, and community stability. They have had personal difficulty getting OPNsense to work but are reconsidering due to positive reviews. The request includes their current Proxmox hardware specs for context.
Key Points:
- The author wants to avoid drama and seeks technical reasons for choosing OPNsense over pfSense.
- They have struggled to get OPNsense working on both virtual and bare-metal setups, always reverting to pfSense.
- Key questions include the pfSense community's longevity, OPNsense's relative security, and exclusive must-have packages.
- The author provides detailed Proxmox virtual machine specs for their test environment.
- The request is framed as a call for friendly, practical thoughts and experiences.
"I DO NOT want to get into a flame war, I am honestly asking why should someone use OPN over PF, I have read about the drama but I am looking for technical reasons; like must have packages or integrations."
— From the article
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State of C++ 2026
Posted on r/programming |
Score: 45 |
Comments: 40
The article recaps major developments in the C++ ecosystem in 2025, including the feature-completion of C++26 with transformative additions like static reflection and contracts, and the rejection of the Safe C++ proposal in favor of Profiles. It also outlines actions for 2026, such as auditing codebases for C++26 readiness and publishing memory safety roadmaps, while noting significant industry trends like AI tool integration and government security guidance.
Key Points:
- C++26 achieved feature-complete status in 2025, introducing major features like static reflection, contracts, and the std::execution async framework.
- The C++ standards committee (WG21) rejected the Safe C++ borrow-checker proposal, opting instead to focus on Safety Profiles, which sparked significant community debate.
- Security agencies like CISA and FBI recommended publishing memory safety roadmaps, and there was industry discussion about reducing C/C++ usage, exemplified by a Microsoft engineer's goal to remove it by 2030.
- Key tooling updates included Visual Studio 2026 with deep GitHub Copilot integration, GCC 15 defaulting to C23, and CMake 4.0's release.
- The article provides a 2026 roadmap advising developers to audit codebases for C++26, review Profiles, update safety roadmaps, test new AI features, and migrate from Qt 5.
"C++26 achieved feature-complete status in June, delivering static reflection, what Herb Sutter called "more transformational than any 10 other major features combined", alongside contracts and the std::execution async framework."
— From the article
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